United States backs in Israel as Arab rage grows

April 15, 2024
Issue 
pro-palestine woman protester
The movement against Israel's genocidal war in Gaza is growing around the world. Photo: Peter Boyle

United States President Joe Bidenā€™s phoned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to ā€œget toughā€ after Israel murdered seven aid workers in Gaza, provoking worldwide condemnation.

The World Central Kitchen (WCK) convoy was attacked on a two-kilometre-long stretch of the Al-Rashid Coastal Road, near a temporary pier used by WCK and other aid groups to unload humanitarian goods reaching Gaza by sea.

Jeffrey St Clair described the attack in Counter Punch: ā€œIn the anodyne language of military slaughter, itā€™s called a ā€˜triple tapā€™ ā€” three successive strikes to make sure you've eliminated your target ā€” the target in this case being the occupants of three vehicles of the World Central Kitchen, who'd just unloaded more than 100 tons of humanitarian food to a warehouse in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.

ā€œThe cars were white and clearly marked with the humanitarian group's logo. The route was in a deconfliction zone that had been cleared by the IDF for travel. The vehiclesā€™ trip and purpose to Deir al-Balah had been coordinated with and pre-approved by the IDF. None of this mattered to the IDF officials operating a Hermes 450 drone that stalked the cars from above as they left the food warehouse.

War against humanitarian aid

ā€œOr perhaps it did matter. Perhaps the intent of the strike was not just to kill the humanitarian aid workers, but to kill humanitarian aid to Gaza altogether.

ā€œHow else to explain the logic of the IDF officers who ordered a drone strike on the first car after the convoy left the warehouse, then when survivors of the missile strike scrambled into the second car and called the IDF to describe being attacked, ordered a strike on the second car and then as the occupants of the last car rushed to rescue their injured colleagues, ordered a third missile strike, killing all seven aid workers.

ā€œWithin hours of the killings, [WCK] executives announced it was suspending operations in Gaza," write St Claire and "WCKā€™s announcement was swiftly followed by the American Near East Refugee Aid (ANERA), which runs the second largest humanitarian operation in Gaza after UNRWA, suspending its work in Gaza." Israel killed an ANERA aid worker in a separate incident.

WCKā€™s head, Erin Gore, said Israelā€™s war in Gaza is a war against humanity.

St Claire also noted that the IDF "actually has a protocol for military strikes against humanitarian organizations" ... and, as reported by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, "those who must give the final approval for activities against sensitive targets, such as aid organizations, are senior officers at the ranks of division commander, commanding general, and even chief of staff".

This shows that Israelā€™s subsequent ā€œapologyā€ for the murders was fakery, meant only as a sop for Biden.

All talk, no action

Bidenā€™s ā€œget toughā€ talk with Netanyahu was anything but. He said that Israel has to ā€œtake stepsā€ to allow food into Gaza, but didnā€™t say what the consequences would be if it did not.

Subsequently, Israel announced it was opening some entry points into Gaza for aid trucks, but these would be limited to 100 a day, and would be stopped and vetted by Israel ā€” which means long delays at the border. So far, this has yet to be implemented.

Famine immediately threatens 1.1 million Gaza Palestinians, according to international agencies. Even if 100 trucks came in each day, and assuming each contained 1000 meals (a stretch) that would mean one hundred thousand people might get one meal a day.

Moreover, even if this paltry amount was allowed in, who would distribute it? The only organisation that could do this is the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNWRA), which Israel has banned and the US has defunded.

If Biden was serious he would have told Netanyahu that all US funds and weapons to Israel would be immediately stopped until all the food aid needed was immediately allowed in for distribution. That would require Israel to stop its war in Gaza.

But the US continues to send dollars, bombs and shells to Israel and the killing continues, with the figure rising to more than 33,000 dead.

Biden also said he told Netanyahu that Israel should ā€œtry harderā€ not to kill so many civilians, as it looks bad.

Pressure at home

Notably, Bidenā€™s report on his discussion with Netanyahu left out reference to Israelā€™s planned ground attack on Rafah, where 1.5 million Gazans are sheltering ā€” indicating that the US is effectively acquiescing to it. Netanyahu has said a date has been set for the attack, but hasnā€™t said when it will be.

The White House did point out, however, that if Iran retaliates for Israelā€™s bombing of the Iranian embassy in Syria, the US will back Israel. This is effectively an act of war against Iran, a violation of the rules of conduct between nations and could lead to the US joining Israel in a wider war.

Israel says it will also go on the ā€œoffensiveā€ against Lebanon, which could have the same result.

Bidenā€™s vague threat to Israel was made for domestic purposes: to try to stem the growing movement begun by Palestinian- and other Arab-Americans and Muslims, but spreading to wider populations ā€” especially youth ā€” who are protesting Bidenā€™s nomination for the Democratic Party in Novemberā€™s election. This is on top of growing disaffection among African-Americans, especially youth.

Arab reactions to the war

Bidenā€™s fake ā€œtoughā€ stance against Netanyahu is also not convincing Arab populations in the Middle East. Asā€™ad AbuKhalil, a Lebanese-American political scientist at California State University Stanislaus, underlined this in a recent piece for Consortium News: ā€œThe US will continue its unconditional support for Israeli genocide, and the Biden administration has been a full partner ā€¦ while frequently feigning concern for the ā€˜humanitarian situationā€™ in Gaza ... Arab political anger is building up, and the scenes of the destruction of Gaza will spawn new militant organizations and political parties. Cries for revenge are heard in all Arab demonstrations, and some will seize the moment and likely express rage at US interestsā€¦

ā€œIt is too early to predict the exact consequences and the repercussions of American support for what is being called the second Nakbah. What Arabs are watching on their TV screens is quite different from the little that is filtered through US TV news and the mainstream media.ā€

AbuKhalil also pointed to a new Gallup poll that reveals that a majority of Americans disapprove of the Israeli war in Gaza, despite Gallupā€™s characterisation of Israelā€™s genocidal war as ā€œmilitary actionā€.

ā€œYet Biden and the Democratic Party leadership continue to offer full support for Israel regardless of deceptive leaks (about Biden-Netanyahu rifts) that are intended to assuage Arab and Muslim public opinion in the US and in the Middle East.ā€

While the US has a long history of support for Israel against the Palestinians, AbuKhalil said the current war in Gaza and Lebanon ā€œcanā€™t be compared to the pastā€ and will ā€œshape generationsā€ to come.

ā€œ[I]t is certain that thousands of Palestinians ā€” and other Arabs ā€” will be planning violent acts of revenge,ā€ wrote AbuKhalil. Even US-friendly governments in the region ā€œare having difficulty controlling their angry populationsā€ and AbuKhalil asks, ā€œHow far will Arab governments go in shielding US and Israeli interests from their angry people?ā€.

Resistance

The Western press has not properly covered the public reaction in the Arab world to Israelā€™s war, wrote AbuKhalil, ā€œItā€™s true that massive demonstrations for Palestine have been larger in many Western countries than in some Arab countries. But massive protests are held weekly in Yemen (in various cities), and Iran, Pakistan and Turkey have also had several mass protests.

Meanwhile, ā€œ[I]n the West Bank, the CIA-sponsored security forces [of the Palestinian Authority] act just like all other Arab regimes in quelling manifestations of public solidarity with the resistance in Gaza, Lebanon and Yemen.

ā€œLebanon has been fully engaged in the war against Israelā€ since October 7, wrote AbuKhalil, ā€œand Hizbollah ā€” while clearly avoiding a larger war ā€” is consistently proving that ā€˜resistance fronts are fully unitedā€™.

ā€œThe standing of Yemen in the Arab world has risen sharply due to the daring military stance of the ruling Ansar Al-Allah (ā€˜Houthiā€™) government despite US and British raids inside the impoverished country,ā€ wrote AbuKhalil, adding that the Houthis will no longer be portrayed as mere tools of Iran.

ā€œThe Houthis are now in the forefront of Arab nationalist identity through solidarity with Gaza. Hizbollah, on the other hand, still faces high expectations from those in the region who want the Lebanese group to open an all-out war against Israel.ā€

Washington says it doesnā€™t want a wider war, but has made it clear that it supports Israel and will join whatever aggressions Israel makes. Netanyahu doesnā€™t care what the rest of the world thinks, as long as he has US backing.

This makes it even more urgent for socialists and all those in the West who oppose Israelā€™s war to redouble their efforts in demanding a full cease fire now.

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